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Journal ArticleDOI

Children's social interactions in the context of moral and conventional transgressions.

Larry Nucci, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1982 - 
- Vol. 53, Iss: 2, pp 403-412
TLDR
NuccI et al. as discussed by the authors found that the responses of both teachers and children to social conventional events differed from their responses to moral events, and that the teacher and child forms of response to transgression changed with child age.
Abstract
NuccI, LARRY P., and Nucci, MARIA SANTIAGO. Children's Social Interactions in the Context of Moral and Conventional Transgressions. CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 1982, 53, 403-412. Observations were made in 10 schools at the second, fifth-, and seventh-grade levels of the forms of responses teachers and children provided to moral and social conventional transgressions. A total of 439 moral and 1,045 social conventional events were observed. It was found that the responses of both teachers and children to social conventional events differed from their responses to moral events. Children were much more likely to respond to moral events than to conventional events. Their responses to moral events revolved around the intrinsic (hurtful or unjust) consequences of the actions upon victims. Children's responses to conventional transgressions focused on aspects of the social order (that is, rules, normative expectations). Children showed an increased tendency to respond to convention with age. Teachers were more likely to respond to social conventional than to moral events. Their responses to the two forms of transgression complemented the responses made by children. Both the teacher and child forms of response to transgression changed with child age. In a second aspect of the study it was found, through interviews of children about ongoing events, that the children made a conceptual discrimination between the observed moral and conventional events.

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Citations
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The Psychopath: Emotion and the Brain

TL;DR: The Psychopathic Individual: The Functional Impairment and a Neuro-Cognitive Account of Reactive Aggression are presented, which concludes that the functional impairment is the most likely cause of Psychopathy.
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The Culture of Morality: Social Development, Context, and Conflict

TL;DR: In this paper, the development of moral and social judgments is discussed and a discussion of social harmony and social conflict is presented. But the focus is on the social hierarchy, subordination, and human capabilities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adolescents' and parents' conceptions of parental authority.

TL;DR: Adolescents at all ages, however, were more likely to reason about the multifaceted and personal issues as personal and sort them as under personal jurisdiction than were parents; parents were morelikely to reason conventionally andsort them as contingent on parental authority than were adolescents.
Journal ArticleDOI

The sources of normativity: Young children's awareness of the normative structure of games.

TL;DR: Two studies investigate 2- and 3-year-old children's awareness of the normative structure of conventional games and demonstrate in a particularly strong way that even very young children have some grasp of the norms of conventional activities.
References
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Book

The Moral Judgment of the Child

Jean Piaget
TL;DR: The Moral Judgment of the Child by Jean Piaget as mentioned in this paper chronicles the evolution of children's moral thinking from preschool to adolescence, tracing their concepts of lying, cheating, adult authority, punishment, and responsibility and offering important insights into how they learn -or fail to learn -the difference between right and wrong.
Journal ArticleDOI

Moral development and behavior : theory, research, and social issues

TL;DR: The success can be started by knowing the basic knowledge and do actions as mentioned in this paper. But it is not only for you to be success in certain life you can be successful in everything.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conceptions of Personal Issues: A Domain Distinct from Moral or Societal Concepts.

TL;DR: NuccI as discussed by the authors found that children and adolescents make a conceptual distinction between events defined as personal matters and issues of morality or social convention, and found that subjects at all ages ranked moral violations as more wrong than violations of convention Social conventional violations, in turn, were ranked as more right than the commission of acts in the personal domain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social interactions and the development of social concepts in preschool children.

TL;DR: Nucci et al. as discussed by the authors found that children and adults responded to social conventional transgressions differently from the ways they reacted to moral transgressions, and different types of responses were elicited by the two types of events.